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Nokia's VP of Microsoft Alliance, Waldemar Sakalus, said that there is "tremendous pressure" to deliver their first joint phone this year, but they don't expect shipments in big volumes until 2012. In a March financial filing, Nokia said it doesn't expect to complete the transition from Symbian to Windows Phone until 2013.

Here are some other details of the deal:

Nokia will provide mapping, navigation, and location-based services. Presumably, these will use technology from Navteq, which Nokia bought in 2007 for more than $8 billion.

Microsoft will provide Bing search services "across the Nokia portfolio" -- in other words, not just to Windows Phones.

Nokia will launch its own Nokia-branded app marketplace built on the Windows Phone Marketplace platform.

Nokia has said that it hopes to transition 200 million current Symbian users to Windows Phone. If that works out, Microsoft would move from also-ran to become the number-two phone platform in the market -- some analysts have predicted it will overtake Apple by 2015.

Here's the video of Sakalus and Microsoft's Matt Bencke discussing the deal.